You can be on Entrepreneur’s cover!

The 4 C's Needed to Build a Strong Startup Community You may have startup activities in your city, but building a startup community is hard, intentional work.

By Erik Mitisek

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Thomas Barwick | Getty Images

You may have startup activities in your city, but building a startup community is hard, intentional work. Once created, startup communities help spur entrepreneurs to build new businesses, connect investors to new opportunities, bring members into the community to support startups and celebrate the success as entrepreneurs excel.

Entrepreneurship is a special kind of sport and startup communities provide the network to make your city innovative, vibrant, and a hot bed for employment. Startup activities are a great start, but a real community will define your long-term prosperity.

The first rule, without question: The community must be entrepreneur led. As a long-time business builder and startup leader, I became interested in building our Denver startup community. I had been in the trenches, and I wanted to help other entrepreneurs succeed. The throes of startup life are best understood by those who live it. There is a natural sense of belonging between those who blaze the trail of creating something from nothing. This shared experience lays the groundwork for a community to come together when all programming, activities, and resources are built with the entrepreneur in mind.

Related: BaubleBar Co-Founders Amy Jain and Daniella Yacobovsky on the Importance of Relying on Your Community

However, for a community to grow and thrive, you have to be intentional. Recognizing strengths and weaknesses of the city, identifying resources available to grow companies and identifying partners who can contribute to the greater good is often challenging. Balancing self-interest with collaboration creates magical results, but it takes work, strong leadership and a vision for what the community can be.

Here are the four C's needed to make your startup community thrive.

1. Celebrate

In 2012, we started Denver Startup Week with the vision to "celebrate everything entrepreneurial" in Denver. Startups require hard, often thankless work and by creating a community wide-event to celebrate entrepreneurs, we were able to turn up the volume on startups and spotlight founders who were putting in the hours and work to build great companies. So

2. Connect

The communication between the stakeholders, job seekers and innovators in a startup community is critical, yet often hard to coordinate. For Denver, we partnered with BuiltIn to launch BuiltIn Colorado to connect entrepreneurs to resources across the community, fill jobs and publish milestones so community members have a pulse on the velocity of startup activity in Denver.

Related: The 'Entrepreneur's Obligation': Investing in Your Startup Ecosystem

Connecting outside of events makes interactions seamless and amplifies the impact of the community on the city.

3. Convene

Startup activities and events need a place to live to be sustainable, especially resources for small business and the underserved. In Denver, the City of Denver, Downtown Denver Partnership and Colorado Technology Association partnered to build The Commons on Champa – Denver's public campus for entrepreneurship. This space is open to the community to host events, meetings and activities that promote and connect the Denver startup community. All events are free to the community, easily accessible, and programmed across a wide range of topics. Investing in community space is critical and provides a hub for the community to unite.

4. Collaborate

A startup community is just that, a community. There is not a mayor or president of the community, but instead a wide-array of volunteer leaders with aligned interests and passions to support entrepreneurs in building startups. Not everything always goes perfect and a strong ethos of generosity will help bring the community together when things do not go as planned. In Denver, we collaborate at every turn and work to propel the startup community forward with entrepreneurs and their needs at the center of the value and resources being created.

Related: 3 Ways Businesses Can Profit From Local Outreach

Every startup community is different, with a different set of opportunities and challenges to work through. With intentional activities and a focus on the long game, great startup communities can be built anywhere.

Erik Mitisek

Executive Director of Project X-IT

Erik Mitisek is the executive director of Project X-ite at the University of Denver. Launched in 2016, Project X-ITE is a campus wide cross-discipline initiative at the intersection of inovation, technology and entrepreneurship positioning DU as a global leader in higher education.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Making a Change

Learn to Play Guitar Even if You Have No Previous Training for Just $20

Start with the beginner's crash course and learn how to play guitar in no time.

Business News

This Fan-Favorite Masters 2024 Item Is Still $1.50 as Tournament Menu Appears Unscathed by Inflation

The pimento cheese sandwich is a tradition almost as big as the tournament itself.

Business News

I Designed My Dream Home For Free With an AI Architect — Here's How It Works

The AI architect, Vitruvius, created three designs in minutes, complete with floor plans and pictures of the inside and outside of the house.

Side Hustle

This Dad Started a Side Hustle to Save for His Daughter's College Fund — Then It Earned $1 Million and Caught Apple's Attention

In 2015, Greg Kerr, now owner of Alchemy Merch, was working as musician when he noticed a lucrative opportunity.

Business News

Here's One Thing Americans Would Take a Pay Cut For — Besides Remote Work

An Empower survey found a high percentage of respondents would take a pay cut for better retirement benefits and remote work options.